CO-234: Procedure Not Paid Separately (Bundled)
The procedure is bundled into another service — provider write-off. Check CCI edits, apply a modifier if the service was distinct, and resubmit.
What Does CO-234 Mean?
CO-234 is a contractual bundling adjustment. The payer considers the denied procedure as already included in the payment for another service, and the provider must write off the denied amount. The provider cannot balance-bill the patient for bundled services.
CARC 234 is a bundling denial. The payer has determined that the procedure you billed separately is already included in the reimbursement for another procedure on the same claim. This is governed by the Correct Coding Initiative (CCI) edits, NCCI Procedure-to-Procedure (PTP) edits, and payer-specific bundling rules that define which services are considered components of another procedure.
The most common scenario is billing a procedure that the payer considers integral to a primary procedure already paid on the claim. This can also trigger when services fall within a surgical global period (0, 10, or 90 days post-surgery) and are considered part of the surgical package. In these cases, follow-up visits and minor procedures within the global window are not paid separately unless a modifier demonstrates they are unrelated to the surgery.
CARC 234 almost always appears with Group Code CO, meaning the provider must absorb the denied amount and cannot bill the patient. The key to resolution is determining whether the procedure was genuinely distinct from the bundled service — if it was performed at a different anatomical site, during a separate session, or for a different diagnosis, the appropriate modifier can unbundle the code pair and allow separate payment.
Common Causes
| Cause | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Procedure bundled into another service per CCI edits The Correct Coding Initiative (CCI) or payer-specific bundling rules determine that the billed procedure is a component of another procedure already paid on the same claim, making it ineligible for separate reimbursement | Most Common |
| Service falls within surgical global period The procedure was performed within the 0, 10, or 90-day global period of a surgery, and the payer considers the service as part of the surgical package rather than a separately payable service | Common |
| Missing or incorrect modifiers The claim is missing modifiers (such as 59, 25, or 24) that would distinguish the procedure as a distinct service separate from the bundled procedure, or the wrong modifier was applied | Common |
| Incorrect or outdated CPT/HCPCS codes The claim uses an incorrect or outdated procedure code that triggers bundling edits, when a more specific or current code would have been paid separately | Occasional |
How to Resolve
Identify the bundling edit, determine whether the procedure was truly distinct, apply the correct modifier, and resubmit the claim.
- Check the NCCI column indicator Look up the code pair in NCCI edits. If the column indicator allows modifier use (indicator 1), the codes can be unbundled with appropriate documentation and modifier.
- Review documentation for distinctness Verify that clinical documentation supports the procedure as a separate, distinct service — different site, different session, or different diagnosis.
- Resubmit with modifier or write off If the service was distinct, add the correct modifier and resubmit. If the service is genuinely a component of the primary procedure, accept the write-off.
Common RARC Pairings
The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the CO-234:
| RARC | Description |
|---|---|
| M15 | Separately billed services/tests have been bundled as they are considered components of the same procedure. |
| N527 | This service/procedure is included in the allowance/payment for another service/procedure already adjudicated. |
How to Prevent CO-234
- Run claims through NCCI edit checks before submission to catch bundling conflicts
- Use billing software with real-time CCI alerts that flag bundled code pairs
- Train coders on proper modifier usage and when unbundling is clinically appropriate
- Track surgical global periods and verify services billed during the window have modifier support
- Audit denied claims regularly to identify recurring bundling patterns
General Prevention
- Review NCCI PTP edits before submitting claims to identify bundled code pairs and apply appropriate modifiers proactively
- Use billing software with real-time CCI edit alerts to catch bundling issues before claim submission
- Ensure Modifier 59 usage is supported by documentation of a distinct site, session, or lesion — do not use it routinely to unbundle
- Track surgical global periods and verify that services billed during the global period have proper modifier support
- Train coding staff on current bundling rules, modifier usage, and payer-specific bundling policies
- Conduct regular audits of denied claims to identify recurring bundling patterns and address root causes
Also Filed As
The same CARC 234 may appear with different Group Codes:
Related Denial Codes
Sources
- https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/234
- https://x12.org/codes/claim-adjustment-reason-codes
- https://www.panahealthcaresolutions.com/blogs/top-reasons-for-denial-code-234-and-how-to-address-them/
- Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.